>> we must say, wake up, america, wake up! >> in selma, alabama, the right to vote. >> but we want to be free now! >> i am not going to stand by and let the supreme court take the right to vote away from us! >> we have to fight for our children. >> i encourage all of you to keep dr. martin luther king jr.'s dream alive. >> where are the women that need to be acknowledged in this movement? >> don't you ever think that men like medgar evers died to give you the right to be a hoodlum. >> yes, we can! because, yes, we did! >> i have a dream that we shall overcome. >> free at last, free at last, thank god almighty, we are free at last. not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. i have a dream today! >>> an historic day here on the mall in our nation's capital, marking the 50th anniversary of the march on washington for jobs and freedom. in 1963, more than 200,000 people of all ages, races, sexes, and sexual orientations gathered here peacefully, or, orderly, as the press reported it back then, right wher